Haven't seen it yet, but have listened to the Isbell track and Shallow on Spotify. Both are really good songs, but Isbell's song is so so good. Cooper does a really good job.
Clarke95 said:
I know this happens all the time, it just seemed out of character for *Ally* not to push back at all or express more ambivalence than just a "uh I can't dance very well"
I agree. Remember he had not gotten out much and judging by their house didn't seem very connected to outside.Junkhead said:
I wasn't surprised at all by that, especially after her manager came and made Jack feel like **** for embarrassing her.
He was an extremely fragile person. And used alcohol and drugs to cope. He finally gave it up because of his love for Ally, but I don't think he believed he could sustain being sober and would eventually hurt and embarrass her again and that thought was too much to handle. He was on the verge of suicide most of his entire life. And I think the interaction with Rez at the end just confirmed everything he had already thought and feared. And that was the nail in the coffin for him.Southlake said:
Spoiler Alert:
Very big spoiler ahead!
I thought the suicide scene with his legs visible in the window and his dog whining outside the door was a bit over dramatic. You know how any scene using an animal evokes extra emotion? Just felt a bit too much. Too easy to yank the heartstrings.
And, we were a bit surprised. He had recently come out of rehab and thought he was far from taking his own life. I know he had mentioned an attempt when he was 13. Did this mean he never got any better? That all this time he was barely hanging on and she actually gave him the will to live? That's what I think. I don't really know. Some of you on here are excellent film critics; what do you think?
First of all, are you questioning the motive of an alcoholic? He wanted a bar to get his booze and he chose the first one he saw. Don't you remember him saying something like, "is this a drag bar?". Sounds to me like he didn't know it was one.Junkhead said:
In addition to all those things, why the hell would he stop at a gay bar (or any other bar for that matter) if there was a cop bar nearby where he was a regular. The first time he brought her on stage was completely unbelievable. No way they're going to do an unrehearsed song like that in front of a crowd that big. That's a few more issues I have off the top of my head.
Quote:
The bar where she punched the guy out was a cop bar. He specifically mentioned it when he took here there because they served after hours. And someone mentioned that he was a regular in there.
I give the guy a pass because it's late, he's drunk and on pills, and he's signing a drag queen's fake plastic rack.Quote:
what celebrity ever signed an autograph by writing their first name in all caps?
Junkhead said:
It's a combination of many of those things that are frustrating to me. It's sloppy storytelling.
Trident 88 said:
Just saw it. There were some great scenes, like:
- Her performance in the drag queen bar
- When he gets her out on stage for the first time
- Hammered at the Grammys
- His last words to his brother in the truck, with Sam Elliot backing it out of the driveway
- Him hanging in the garage with the pup outside. Sad, but not unnecessarily graphic
Of course, the music in this movie should clean up at the Academy Awards. Aside from that, Cooper might win Best Actor, but I think everyone else should be satisfied with being nominated.
G Martin 87 said:
As soon as I saw the father, I recognized him as Andrew Dice Clay. He was superb! I honestly wouldn't be surprised if he gets a supporting actor nomination.
Lady Gaga steals the show, as expected. But Bradley Cooper was amazing.